Renzo Piano
Pritzker Architecture Prize Laureate
1998
Piano accepting Prize at White
House
with President Clinton and Jay
and Cindy Pritzker
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Renzo Piano of
Italy is the
1998 Laureate of the
Pritzker Architecture Prize

Los Angeles, CA-Renzo Piano, a 60-year-old Italian
architect who builds all over the world, has been named the 1998 Laureate
of the Pritzker Architecture Prize. In celebration of the 20th anniversary
of the prize, the formal presentation will be made at a ceremony hosted
by President and Mrs. Clinton at The White House on June 17.
In making the announcement, Jay A. Pritzker, president
of The Hyatt Foundation, which established the award in 1979, quoted from
the jury's citation which describes Piano's architecture as a "rare melding
of art, architecture, and engineering in a truly remarkable synthesis."
Piano is the twenty-first architect in the world to be selected for his
profession's highest honor which bestows a $100,000 grant and a bronze
medallion. He is the second Italian to become a Pritzker Laureate, the
first being the late Aldo Rossi who was honored in 1990.
Piano first achieved international fame for the Centre
George Pompidou in Paris completed in 1978, a collaborative effort with
another young architect from England, Richard Rogers. Since then, Piano
has gone on to higher critical acclaim for a much wider range of building
types with greater diversity and subtlety,that include among many others,
the Menil Museum and its Cy Twombly addition in Houston, and the Beyeler
Museum in Basel, Switzerland.
On a grand scale, he designed a spectacular soccer
stadium for his native Italy in Bari, an eye-popping shopping center called
Bercy in Paris that has been likened to a giant space ship that has just
landed. Perhaps one of his most remarkable projects is the Kansai Air Terminal,
the world's largest, built on a man-made island in Osaka Bay, Japan.
Born and raised in Genoa, Italy, Piano divides his
time between a home there and another in Paris when he is not traveling
to the many world-wide sites of his projects. He currently is working in
Berlin on the Potsdamer Platz redevelopment; in Sydney, Australia on a
mixed use tower; in New Caledonia on a Cultural Center; with projects just
beginning at Harvard in Cambridge, Massachusetts; the Padre Pio Pilgrimage
Church in Foggia, Italy; and other continuing projects in Rome, Paris and
Stuttgart.
Pritzker Prize jury chairman, J. Carter Brown, commented,
"Renzo Piano's command of technology is that of a true virtuoso; yet he
never allows it to command him. Deeply imbued with a sense of materials
and a craftsman's intuitive feel for what they can do, his architecture
embodies a rare humanism." And from fellow juror, author Ada Louise Huxtable,
"Renzo Piano celebrates structure in a perfect union of technology and
art." From juror Charles Correa, a much honored architect from Bombay,
India, comes the praise, "He brings to each project a great seriousness
of purpose, combined with a lyrical understanding of materials (and how
they might come together) - so that what emerges is an architecture of
extraordinary clarity and finesse." Juror Toshio Nakamura, editor and architectural
writer from Japan, said, "Piano's approach to design is always imaginative
and inventive, technologically oriented, yet with the hand-crafter's attention
to detail. His capacity for architectural problem-solving tempered by a
poetic sensibility has made possible his wide diversity of projects, from
temporary exhibition halls to the world's largest air terminal, from museums
to apartments, and from factories to high rise towers."
Bill Lacy, the executive director of the Pritzker
Prize, quoted further from the jury citation which states, "Piano has,
over three decades of his career, relentlessly searched for new dimensions
in his structures, both literally and figuratively."
Lacy, who is an architect himself and president of
the State University of New York at Purchase, added , "Renzo Piano's body
of work is reminiscent of the Roman god Janus, represented by two conjoined
heads facing in opposite directions, one looking forward, the other backward.
This year's Pritzker Architecture Prize laureate embodies that dichotomy.
It was appropriate on this occasion of the 20th anniversary of the Prize,
to select an architect whose work is such an apt representation of the
purpose of the prize."
The purpose of the Pritzker Architecture Prize is
to honor annually a living architect whose built work demonstrates a combination
of those qualities of talent, vision and commitment, which has produced
consistent and significant contributions to humanity and the built environment
through the art of architecture.
The distinguished jury that selected Renzo Piano
as the 1998 Laureate consists of its founding chairman, J. Carter Brown,
director emeritus of the National Gallery of Art, and chairman of the U.S.
Commission of Fine Arts; and alphabetically, Giovanni Agnelli, chairman
of Fiat from Torino, Italy; Charles Correa, architect of Bombay, India;
Ada Louise Huxtable, author and architectural critic of New York; Toshio
Nakamura, architectural writer/editor of Tokyo, Japan; Jorge Silvetti,
chairman, department of architecture, Harvard University Graduate School
of Design; and juror emeritus, Lord Rothschild, chairman of the National
Heritage Memorial Fund of Great Britain and formerly the chairman of that
country's National Gallery.
The prize presentation ceremony moves to different
locations around the world each year, paying homage to historic and contemporary
architecture. For the past two years, unfinished construction sites by
two previous Pritzker Laureates, Richard Meier (1984) and Frank Gehry (1989),
were the venues for the ceremony. In 1996, it was the since completed Getty
Center in Los Angeles where Rafael Moneo of Spain received his prize. In
1997 the presentation to Sverre Fehn of Norway was made in the Guggenheim
Museum, Bilbao, Spain. In years past, such diverse locations as Versailles,
Prague Castle, Todai-ji Temple, and several major museums in the United
States have been venues.
In addition to the Laureates already mentioned, Philip
Johnson was the first in 1979. The late Luis Barragan of Mexico was named
in 1980. The late James Stirling of Great Britain was elected in 1981,
Kevin Roche in 1982, Ieoh Ming Pei in 1983. Hans Hollein of Austria was
the 1985 Laureate. Gottfried Boehm of Germany received the prize in 1986.
Kenzo Tange was the first Japanese architect to receive the prize in 1987;
Fumihiko Maki was the second from Japan in 1993; and Tadao Ando the third
in 1995. Robert Venturi received the honor in 1991, and Alvaro Siza of
Portugal in 1992. Christian de Portzamparc of France was elected Pritzker
Laureate in 1994. Two architects were named to celebrate the tenth anniversary
of the prize in 1988: the late Gordon Bunshaft of the United States and
Oscar Niemeyer of Brazil, hence the reason for Piano being the 21st Laureate
on the 20th anniversary.
The field of architecture was chosen by the Pritzker
family because of their keen interest in building due to their involvement
with developing the Hyatt Hotels around the world; also because architecture
was a creative endeavor not included in the Nobel Prizes. The procedures
were modeled after the Nobels, with the final selection being made by the
international jury with all deliberations and voting in secret. Nominations
are continuous from year to year with over 500 nominees from more than
forty countries being considered each year.
Citation
from the Jury
Renzo Piano's architecture reflects that rare
melding of art, architecture, and engineering in a truly remarkable synthesis,
making his intellectual curiosity and problem-solving techniques as broad
and far ranging as those earlier masters of his native land, Leonardo da
Vinci and Michelangelo. While his work embraces the most current technology
of this era, his roots are clearly in the classic Italian philosophy and
tradition. Equally at ease with historical antecedents, as well as the
latest technology, he is also intensely concerned with issues of habitability
and sustainable architecture in a constantly changing world.
The array of buildings by Renzo Piano is staggering
in scope and comprehensive in the diversity of scale, material and form.
He is truly an architect whose sensibilities represent the widest range
of this and earlier centuries - informed by the modern masters that preceded
him, reaching back even to the 15th century of Brunelleschi - he has remained
true to the concept that the architect must maintain command over the building
process from design to built work. Valuing craftsmanship, not just of the
hand, but also of the computer, Piano has great sensitivity for his materials,
whether using glass, metal, masonry or wood. Such concepts, values and
sensitivities are not surprising for someone whose father, uncles and grandfather
were all builders.
By choosing a career as an architect rather
than contractor, he may have broken with a family tradition in one sense,
but in fact, he has enhanced that tradition in ways his forebears could
only have imagined.
Always restless and inventive, Piano has, over
three decades of his career, relentlessly searched for new dimensions in
his structures, both literally and figuratively. His early Pompidou Centre
in Paris, which brought the first international recognition of his talent
and promise, could have been a stylistic end in itself. Instead Piano persevered
with unrelenting experimentation that resulted in subsequent works that
included the Houston Menil Museum along with its exquisite Cy Twombly addition,
and the more recent Beyeler Museum in Switzerland. These three museums
show his unerring sensitivity for site, context and a remarkable mastery
of form, shape and space.
Piano proved himself a master of the gigantic
project with Kansai, the world's largest air terminal in Osaka Bay, Japan,
and again with the imposing Bercy Shopping Center in Paris, as well as
a massive and beautiful National Science Museum in Amsterdam. His soccer
stadium in Bari, Italy is like no other in the world, with its great swaths
of blue sky interrupting the usual monotony of stadia seating.
His versatility is displayed further in such
projects as the beautiful sweep of a nearly one thousand foot long bridge
that curves across Ushibuka Bay in Southern Japan; again with the design
of a 70,000-ton luxury ocean liner; an automobile; and with his own hillside-hugging
transparent workshop. All of his works confirm his place in the annals
of architecture history, and the future holds even greater promise.
The Pritzker Architecture Prize applauds Renzo
Piano's work in redefining modern and post-modern architecture. His interventions,
contributions, and continued explorations to solve contemporary problems
in a technological age, add to the definition of the art of architecture.
Additional
Comments
Note to editors:
The following are some additional comments from individual Pritzker Prize
Jurors:
"Renzo Piano's command of technology is that of a
true virtuoso; yet he never allows it to command him. Deeply imbued with
a sense of materials and craftsman's intuitive feel for what they can do,
his architecture embodies a rare humanism. He has proven himself a master
of light, and of a wide divergence of building types. (For me, his understanding
of the challenge of a museum's mission to put the art first has resulted
in some of the most poetic and successful art museum structures anywhere.)
Piano is a magician, rooted in the believable."
J. Carter Brown, Chairman, Pritzker Jury
"He brings to each project a great seriousness of purpose, combined with
a lyrical understanding of materials (and how they might come together)
- so that what emerges is an architecture of extraordinary clarity and
finesse. "
Charles Correa, Pritzker Juror
"Renzo Piano celebrates structure in a perfect union of technology and
art."
Ada Louise Huxtable, Pritzker Juror
"Piano's approach to design is always imaginative and inventive, technologically
oriented, yet with the hand-crafter's attention to detail. His capacity
for architectural problem-solving tempered by a poetic sensibility has
made possible his wide diversity of projects, from temporary exhibition
halls to the world's largest air terminal, from museums to apartments,
and from factories to high rise towers."
Toshio Nakamura, Pritzker Juror
About Renzo
Piano
Renzo Piano is a man whose work is reinventing architecture in projects
scattered around the world - from a Mixed Use Tower in Sydney, Australia
to the mile-long Kansai Air Terminal on a man-made island in Osaka Bay,
Japan to the master plan for the reconstruction of Potsdamer Platz in Berlin
or the Beyeler Foundation Musuem in Basel, Switzerland. Even this skip
around the globe does not indicate the full range or enormous output of
this prodigious architect. Renzo Piano's projects include not only buildings
that range from homes to apartments, offices to shopping centers, museums,
factories, workshops and studios, airline and railway terminals, expositions,
theatres and churches; but also bridges, ships, boats, and cars, as well
as city planning projects, major renovations and reconstructions, and even
television star of a program on architecture.
He was born into a family of builders in Genoa, Italy in 1937. His grandfather,
his father, four uncles and a brother were all contractors, and he admits,
he should have been one too, but instead chose architecture. Piano declares
his architecture has an important legacy - a passion for construction,
or more pointedly, a culture of doing, resulting from growing up in a family
of builders.
He was seventeen when he approached his father with the idea of going to
architecture school. "Why do you want to be just an architect? You can
be a builder," was his father's response that has never been forgotten.
Perhaps that is the reason for the name Renzo Piano Building Workshop,
rather than Piano Architects & Associates. Explains Piano. "We not
only design things there, but we also make things, and test them. Keeping
some of the action together with the conception makes me feel a little
less like a traitor to my family. The name is also a deliberate expression
of the sense of collaboration and teamwork that permeates our work." It
was in 1980 that the Building Workshop was formed, and now has offices
in Paris, Genoa and Berlin employing approximately a hundred people in
the three locations.
Following his graduation from Milan Polytechnic Architecture School in
1964, he worked in his father's construction company, designing under the
guidance of Franco Albini. In addition to his 15th century idol, Brunelleschi,
Piano pays homage to Jean Prouv‚ of France with whom he formed a friendship
during the time (1965-70) that he worked in the offices of Louis Kahn in
Philadelphia and Z. S. Makowsky in London. Two other important influences
he acknowledges were Buckminster Fuller and Pierluigi Nervi, albeit from
afar.
While still studying in Milan, he married a girl he had known from school
days in Genoa, Magda Arduino. Their first child, Carlo, was born in 1965.
He is now a journalist. Another son followed three years later, Matteo,
who is an independent industrial designer; and a third child, daughter
Lia, now 25, is pursuing a career in architecture.
His first important commission was in 1969 to design the Italian Industry
Pavilion at Expo '70 in Osaka. His late brother, Ermanno, built and installed
the pavilion and a number of other projects before his premature death
in 1993.
The Expo project attracted much favorable attention, including that of
another young architect named Richard Rogers, who although born in Florence
was English. The two architects found that they had a great deal in common
and when an engineering firm suggested that they work together and enter
the international competition for the Georges Pompidou Center (also known
as Beaubourg) in Paris; they did and won.
The result was a hundred thousand square meters (over a million square
feet) in the heart of Paris, devoted to the figurative arts, music, industrial
design, and literature. In the two decades since it opened, over a 150,000,000
people have visited it, averaging more than 25,000 people per day - an
overwhelming success - both with the people of Paris and the international
media. Both Rogers and Piano became recognizable names throughout the world.
Described often as "high tech," Piano prefers other modifiers. In his own
words, "Beaubourg was intended to be a joyful urban machine.a creature
that might have come from a Jules Verne book, or an unlikely looking ship
in dry dock. Beaubourg is a provocation.an apt description of my feelings,
but has no negative connotations as far as the quality of the design and
the reasons behind it are concerned. Beaubourg is a double provocation:
a challenge to academicism, but also a parody of the technological imagery
of our time. To see it as high-tech is a misunderstanding."
In the introduction to the book, Renzo Piano, Buildings and Projects 1971-1989,
Pulitzer Prize winning architecture critic Paul Goldberger wrote, "Like
any artist who produces a celebrated work early in his career, Renzo Piano
has in many ways been more confined than liberated by the Centre Beaubourg.known
primarily as the architect who.installed this high-tech spoof at monumental
scale into the heart of Paris." And then referring to more recent projects
such as the Menil Collection museum in Houston, Texas; the 60,000 seat
football stadium in Bari, Italy; and the multi-functional complex of the
giant Fiat factory at Lingotto near Turin, Italy, Goldberger continues:
".(there is) the presence in all of these projects of a light, tensile
quality and an obvious love of technology. But where the expression of
technology at Beaubourg was broad and more than a little satirical, in
the buildings since Beaubourg, it has been straighter, quieter, and vastly
more inventive."
One of the casualties of the Beaubourg project, which required years of
living in Paris, however, was Piano's marriage. His wife preferred to live
in Genoa, and so they separated. In 1989, he met Emilia (Milly) Rossato
when she came to work for his Renzo Piano Building Workshop. They were
married in 1992 by Jaques Chirac, then the Mayor of Paris who supported
the construction of Beaubourg through many crises. They live in Paris next
door to their office there, just a few blocks from Pompidou in the Marais
district. In actual fact, they divide their time between Paris and Genoa,
with frequent trips to his many projects around the world.
In 1995, Piano was called upon to renovate the Centre Georges Pompidou.
The popularity of the place has taken its toll. The library and exhibition
spaces are being expanded, and the public spaces reorganized. Plans call
for a reopening on the eve of the new millennium, Decemeber 31, 1999, as
Grand Beaubourg.
Two other projects closely related to the Beaubourg are the IRCAM Extension
and the Reconstruction of the Atelier Brancusi, both on the same Centre
Pompidou square. The former's initials in French stand for Pierre Boulez's
Institute of Musical Research which is actually attached to the Pompidou.
The need for the greatest possible soundproofing originally led IRCAM to
excavate a space underneath the square for its various sound labs and studios.
The only visible evidence that it was there was a glass ceiling and a few
elements of the ventilation system. The need for more space, a desire to
emphasize the institute's role and image, prompted the extension which
consists of a tower six stories above ground and three below. It fills
an angle left between two existing buildings at the edge of the square.
When Constantin Brancusi died, his will left all his work - sculptures,
drawing, paintings, photographs - to the French state on the condition
that they remain in his studio. In the 1950's the area occupied by his
studio was demolished to make way for other things. Piano was given the
task of rebuilding Atelier Brancusi on the square of Centre Pompidou. "What
we did," says Piano, "was reproduce the sensation of being surrounded by
an explosion of art made up of many pieces in different stages of development."
It was in 1982, that the now late Dominique Schlumberger de Menil, widow
of John, contacted Piano to design a museum in Houston to house the 10,000
works of primitive and modern art in the Menil Collection. Completed in1986,
it has achieved universal high praise, and is often cited as Piano's finest
work. Embodying the idea of a "museum village," i.e. it is made up of several
buildings, the construction is large, but not monumental, and rises no
higher than its neighboring small houses. The walls are built of planks
of wood attached to a metal framework.
Perhaps the most distinguishing aspect of the Menil Collection is the roof
of the exhibition spaces, made up of repeating modular elements described
as "leaves." Each leaf is a very thin section of reinforced concrete integrated
with a steel lattice girder. They function as roof, ventilation and light
control efficiently. In his book titled Logbook, Piano states, "Paradoxically,
the Menil Collection with its great serenity, its calm, and its understatement,
is far more 'modern,' scientifically speaking, than Beaubourg. The technological
appearance of Beaubourg is parody. The technology used for the Menil Collection
is even more advanced (in its structures, materials, systems of climate
control), but it is not flaunted."
Some five years later, Piano was called upon to make an addition to this
museum village - a small (approximately 11,000 square feet) gallery to
house a permanent exhibition of the pictures and sculptures of Cy Twombly.
Built of modest materials, the Cy Twombly Gallery has an outer facing of
ochre-toned concrete, the building is devoted entirely to exhibition space
with floors of natural American oak. All the galleries in the building
are illuminated by natural light (except the one in the center). The roof
takes the form of a series of superimposed layers that filter the light.
The top layer is a metal grating, then comes a layer of solar deflectors
and a layer of fixed skylights. Immediately above the exhibition space
is a fabric layer. All the systems for controlling the deflectors are electronic.
The year before he began work on the Houston de Menil Collection, he was
hired to transform the Schlumberger industrial plant on the outskirts of
Paris. The company made measurement systems for fluids, and including a
device to detect the presence of oil underground. What were mechanical
devices were being replaced by electronic ones. Piano's plan called for
the demolition of part of the old workshop, where a park was laid out over
a parking facility with space for a thousand cars. Some of the original
buildings were retained but restructured as offices and laboratories. Although
the electronic plant in Paris and the Houston museum were totally unrelated,
it is interesting to note that Mrs. Dominique de Menil was a member of
the Schlumberger family of France before marrying and moving to Texas.
"While working on the Menil Collection in Texas," Piano recalls, "we made
a little machine - which we called a bit pompously, 'the solar machine'
- that would allow us in Genoa to find out the position of the sun in Houston.
We also built one-to-ten scale models, which we put in the garden to study
the diffusion of light. All the projects that come out of the Building
Workshop have stories of similar experiments."
Piano went on to relate that Brunelleschi, who is Piano's favorite architect
from history, studied the mechanism of the clock so that he could apply
it to a system of great counterweights which in turn was used to raise
the beams for the dome of the Florence Cathedral.
"Knowing how to do things not just with the head," says Piano, "but with
the hands as well: this might seem a programmatic and ideological goal.
It is not. It is a way of safeguarding creative freedom. If you intend
to use a material, a construction technique, or an architectural element
in an unusual way, there is always a time when you hear yourself saying,
'It can't be done,' simply because no one has ever tried before. But if
you have actually tried, then you can keep going - and so you gain a degree
of independence in design that you would not have otherwise."
Reflecting on the building of the Centre Pompidou, Piano elaborated the
point, "We had to make a structure out of pieces of cast metal. The entire
French steel industry rose up in arms: it refused point-blank, saying that
a structure like that wouldn't stay up. But we were sure of our facts,
and passed the order on to the German company Krupp. And so it was that
the main structure of the Centre Pompidou was made in Germany, even if
the girders had to be delivered at night, almost in secret. This was one
case in which technique protected art. Our understanding of structures
set free our capacity for expression."
In 1979, Habitat, an educational television program was produced by RAI,
the Italian government television network, starring Piano, who says, "We
set out to explain to the non-specialist audience the principles of construction,
a few simple experiments on structures and materials. I tried to get the
message across not to be overawed by architecture, explaining that this
century has produced impressive structures because it has developed fantastic
machinery for building. But innovation in process does not necessarily
entail high technology in construction. There is very little today that
can bear comparison to the structural and formal research that went into
a 15th century church."
IBM called upon Piano to provide them with a Traveling Pavilion to visit
20 European cities to convey the marvels of new technology. They wanted
it to be self-contained with a pavilion of its own that could be set up
in urban parks. The Piano solution was made up of 34 arches, each consisting
of six pyramidal elements of polycarbonate. When assembled, it was 48 meters
(154 feet) long and six meters (20 feet) high. It was a great success,
seen by a million and a half people.
The Lingotto Factory Conversion, begun in 1988 was another major project
for Piano. Built in the 1920's as a Fiat automobile manufacturing plant,
it was Europe's first and largest factory for mass production. Five hundred
meters (almost 1000 yards or ten football fields) long, five stories high,
with an auto test track on its roof, the building was an enormous part
of the city of Turin. In the early 1980's, the plant was retired. Of it,
Piano says, "I believe that it is one of the great monuments of manufacturing,
and is deserving of loving restoration, just as any great work of architecture."
It was also the first project in which Piano undertook urban space planning.
The plan was to provide a multifaceted future as a center for technology
and trade fairs, university, park, exhibition and meeting space and auditorium,
in fact a concert hall for an audience of 2000. A surprising addition to
the structure was a "bubble" on the roof, literally a spherical room for
high level meetings, totally transparent with a commanding view.
To celebrate the 500th anniversary of the discovery of America, Genoa organized
the Columbus International Exposition which Piano took on as a project
to make lasting interventions of urban reclamation in the area of the old
port. "This was a great opportunity," says Piano, "to rescue the historic
city from decay. Works of permanent value could be carried out that would
remain and be useful when the expo was over." His work included the restructuring
and reconstruction of cotton warehouses (built in the 19th century), four
bonded warehouses from the 17th century, and another recent warehouse,
Millo. Several new constructions were an aquarium which has become one
of Italy's most popular attractions, the harbor office, and Bigo, described
as a gigantic derrick that served as the symbol of the expo, and supported
a tensile structure for festivities as well as a panoramic elevator ride.
Another major intervention for Piano has been the Cit‚ Internationale in
Lyon, France. Some 15 hectares (37 acres) along the Rhone River which was
an International Fair Ground is being turned into a mixed use complex that
so far includes office buildings, conference centers, a museum of contemporary
art, and will have a hotel, casino and multiscreen movie theatre. It is
Piano's first application of the "double skin" for buildings.
He explains it: "The protective finish of the buildings is provided by
a terra-cotta covering that, as well as responding very well to the local
climate, bestows a warm color and delicate texture on the buildings. The
outer layer of the facing consists of glass panels. Some of these can be
opened, turning on pivots like skylights. Between the two surfaces, a gap
acts as a heat exchange, reducing energy loss. The reflections in the glass
shells of the buildings cause the appearance of the constructions to change
completely with variations in the strength, color and direction of light.
Since all the buildings in the complex will be faced in this way, it will
give the complex the unity (but not uniformity) that is necessary for the
place to have a strong and distinctive character.
San Nicola Stadium in Bari, Italy was built for the World Soccer Championships
of 1990. "The stadium was built of one basic material, concrete, and the
contribution of the late Peter Rice, a structural engineer for Ove Arup
& Partners, was essential," says Piano. "The shape of the stands and
the beams clearly reveals the modularity of the structure. The entire ellipse
of the stadium is made up of 26 petals, each assembled out of 310 crescent
shaped elements, prefabricated out of concrete on site. Beneath this level,
each sector is supported by just four pillars. Although these supports
are fairly massive, the curvature of the elements lends impetus to the
structure, and makes the petals rise above the banked ground as if they
are floating. The gaps between the petals let the light and color of the
landscape into the stadium, giving the tiers an extroverted character.
Concave structures, especially when crowded with people, tend to induce
claustrophobia. I believe the transparency achieved with the vertical cuts
reduces this effect, and contributes to a more relaxed enjoyment of the
sport."
Piano elaborates, "My insistence on transparency is often misunderstood
and interpreted as insensitivity to the 'space' of architecture. In the
jargon of our profession, to say that you have no sense of space is the
vilest of insults. For many people, space does not exist except insofar
as it is precisely - and solidly - circumscribed. This is a concept of
space that disturbs me. It feels like the filling in a sandwich of bricks,
a layer of air squeezed between the walls that surround it. I have a less
suffocating idea of space: the space of architecture is a microcosm, an
inner landscape.
"Of course, space is made up of volumes, high and low volumes, compressions
and expansions, calm and tension, horizontal planes and inclined planes.
They are all elements intended to stir the emotions, but they are not the
only ones. I believe that it is very important to work with the immaterial
elements of space. I think that is one of the main currents in my architecture.
"The Gothic cathedral moves us with its spaces soaring into the sky, which
draw the sinner's soul upward. It also stirs our feeling with elongated
windows that shoot blades of light into the dark church, and by the colors
that filter through the stained glass. We have to give our profession back
its capacity to arouse the emotions by creating dramatic spaces, serene
spaces, participatory spaces, secluded spaces. The choice is linked to
the function and use of the setting. If you are designing a museum, you
offer contemplation. It is not enough for the light to be perfect. You
also need calm, serenity, and even a voluptuous quality linked to contemplation
of the works of art. This is what Ernst Beyeler asked from me one day,
paraphrasing the words of Matisse.
"Beyeler, a Swiss collector of art retained me to create a museum among
the trees of a state-owned park in Riehen (near Basel), Switzerland. He
is a perfectionist, and a watchful, hands-on client who wanted to create
a close collaboration. The result is the Beyeler Foundation Museum, a structure
built around four main walls of the same length, oriented in a north-south
direction and parallel to the boundary wall. The walls are of different
heights and one extends into the park and becomes a low wall guiding visitors
to the entrance. The transparent, cantilevered roof is, to some extent,
independent of the building, extending beyond the perimeter defined by
the walls. All of the walls are faced with a stone that was selected because
of its similarity in appearance to the red sandstone of Basel Cathedral.
Because the locally available stone aged badly and flaked, which could
cause continual maintenance problems, a material was shipped in from Argentina
after an extensive search."
In another quite different work, the Bercy 2 Shopping Center in Charenton
le Pont (Paris), France, Piano says, "We inherited this project from another
studio when the client thought their design for the roof too conventional.
We had to accept the constraints for structural grid, access, services
and parking that had already been made. The client had a clear objective,
he wanted his shopping center to be visible, to attract attention. A degree
of effrontery was necessary. Positioned as it was at an expressway interchange,
we modeled the building after the curves of the highway, just as at Lyon,
we had been inspired by the bend in the river. Approached in this way,
the structure began to soften, to grow rounded, until it took on the appearance
of a giant meteorite. Once we had established the relationship between
the supporting structure and this complex three dimensional profile, it
became a matter of determining the best material to accomplish the roof.
We decided on stainless steel panels, which gave Bercy the final appearance
of a gleaming airship."
Another important project in France is 220 apartments called Rue de Meaux
Housing in Paris, in which Piano took on the challenge of building low
cost housing. "What fascinated me on this project," says Piano, "was the
idea of going beyond shelter, comfort and functionally usable space. I
wanted to show that with even limited funds, it's possible to produce houses
filled with light, greenery and ornament."
The structure, six stories high, surrounds a courtyard planted with grass,
low shrubs, birch trees and flowers. The short sides of the rectangle are
interrupted by two vertical cuts that allow access to the interior court.
Piano explains further, "The original terms of this progam called for a
public road to run through the middle of the complex. We put courteous
but firm opposition to this idea. The home should be a refuge of peace
and quiet. Does this mean the quality of social life and possibility of
participation has been reduced? Quite the contrary. True sociability is
here, in this communal courtyard where all the residents can go to stroll,
read and talk."
The Thompson Optronics Factory on the outskirts of Paris was designated
for a site that had no other constructions, and the land was flat and characterized
by no particular vegetation. The company which makes electronic equipment
must be able to continually redefine its needs as technology changes. It
was not clear how large the building might eventually be, nor how to break
down various functions within it. As a result, Piano created a completely
open space, using a tall arched element with a span of nearly 15 meters
(approximately 50 feet) as the basic building module. Using multiples of
these, the plant size is extremely flexible.
Before entering the competition for the Kansai Air Terminal in Osaka, Japan,
Piano tells of asking the client to visit the site. There was a moment
of embarrassment, but with great courtesy the Japanese took Piano on a
boat trip. At a certain point on the open sea, they asked where the airport
was to be, and their host replied, "Here." Since Osaka had no room for
an airport, the authorities decided to build an artificial island for it
in the bay. The island would be 15 square kilometers (approximately 5.5
square miles).
"With Tom Barker, a mechanical engineer with Ove Arup & Partners,"
says Piano, "we investigated streams of air, from which the form of the
terminal's roof would emerge. In cross section, the roof is an irregular
arch (in reality a series of arches of different radii), given this shape
to channel air from the passenger side of the terminal to the runway side
without the need for closed ducts. Baffles left open to view guide the
air flow along the ceiling and reflect the light coming from above. We
were creating an aerodynamic ceiling, concerned not with the flow of air
outside, but inside. Kansai is a precision instrument, a child of mathematics
and technology. It forms a strong and recognizable landmark; it has a clear
and simple shape that declares itself without hesitation.
"It is a structure with undulating, asymmetrical lines. It spreads over
the island like a glider - a missing link between ground and airplane.
In the absence of other constraints, the only factor that has shaped its
volumes is the space taken up by the aircraft and their maneuvering. The
planes determine form, function and extension. They are the true masters
of the island. We have paid homage to these local divinities with a departure
area that has 42 passenger loading bridges and extends for 1700 meters
(almost 1900 yards), and is capable of handling 100,000 passengers a day.
Kansai is one of the largest buildings ever built, three Lingottos in a
row."
In January, 1995, Kobe suffered an earthquake. Kansai was the same distance
from the epicenter as Kobe. The intensity of the shock was the same, but
Piano reports, "Kansai registered no damage, not even broken glass."
The UNESCO Laboratory and Workshop (also referred to as the Renzo Piano
Building Workshop) came into being in 1989 on the coast west of Genoa,
between Voltri and Vesima. Perched on the rocks and surrounded by the sea,
it is half rock, half ship, and in fact, the place is called Punta Nave:
Ship Rock. "Here I find calm," says Piano, "silence and concentration -
all things that are essential to my personal way of working. Creating something
is difficult, but putting yourself in the right state to create is even
more difficult. You need peace and quiet, but also tension; calm, but energy
too; time, but speed as well." Piano hastened to add that the office is
no hermitage, first of all because a lot of people from many different
countries work there, and also because it communicates in real time with
the rest of the world.
Placed between the mountains and the sea, the workshop stands on terraced
slopes, and is made almost entirely of glass, looking very much like the
greenhouses that share hillsides in this part of the Riviera. The plants
are inside and out, blending into the work spaces.
On the other side of the world in Noum‚a, New Caledonia, Piano is doing
the Tjibaou Cultural Center, which he describes as "the most reckless of
my many ventures into other fields." He explained further that the project
addresses the difficulties of finding a way to express the traditions of
the Pacific in modern language. His concept is a genuine village composed
on ten structures of different sizes and functions, the largest being as
tall as a nine story building. The ten structures of the center are organized
into three villages: one is devoted to exhibitions; another is for administrative
staff, historians, and other offices; the third is for creative activities
such as dance, painting, sculpture and music. The constructions are, as
Piano puts it, "an expression of the harmonious relationship with the environment,
that is typical of the local culture. They are curved structures resembling
huts, built out of wooden joists and ribs; they are containers of an archaic
appearance, whose interiors are equipped with all the possibilities offered
by modern technology."
Piano was approached by Padre Gerardo, an administrator to the monks of
San Giovanni Rotondo, to design a temple for the ever-increasing numbers
of pilgrims coming to visit the places where Padre Pio, a friar famous
for his stigmata, used to live. Piano declined because he found the idea
too intimidating. But for three weeks, he received fax blessings from Padre
Gerardo until he consented to do the project. It is Piano's concept that
the Padre Pio Pilgrimage Church will "spring out of the stone of the mountainside.
Walls, parvis, supporting arches, and covering roof will all be made of
a local stone. The main span of over 50 meters (over 150 feet) will perhaps
be the longest supporting arch ever built out of stone." The dome of the
church will not be very tall, in fact will not be visible until visitors
are very close. A gently sloping courtyard will be capable of holding up
to 30,000 people; another 6,000 could go inside the church.
"Cities are beautiful because they are created slowly," says Piano. "It
takes 500 years to create a city, and we (a group of architects are involved)
have been asked to reconstruct a large chunk of Berlin in just five years."
He is referring to Potsdamer Platz, a part of Berlin that was destroyed
by war, an area straddling the line between what was East and West Berlin,
and not far from the Reichstag. In the 1920's and 1930's, it was the center
of the city's social and cultural life. Piano won the competition to develop
the master plan for the area which when finished will be home and workplace
for some 40,000 people, a figure that will double during each day with
people drawn to the various activities there. The square will have stores
of every kind, residences of varying kinds including a hotel, offices,
restaurants, theatre and casino, and the use of public art. The Debis Tower,
offices for a subsidiary of Daimler-Benz which is managing the intervention,
was the first of Piano's eight buildings in the plan to be completed in
October 1997.
In Amsterdam, National Center for Science and Technology is set on top
of the entrance to a tunnel that runs under the harbor, making the most
of space in a country with no room to spare. "If at the base of the museum,"
explains Piano, "there are cars that go downward into the tunnel under
the sea, then on one side of the building, asymmetrically, is a ramp to
induce an opposite movement, taking pedestrians up to the sloping roof,
the public square of the complex with a view of the city." The interior
is organized on different levels that cut diagonally across the building
that provides some 12,000 square yards of exhibition space.
As has already been pointed out, the works of Renzo Piano are so extensive
that it would take many books (and has) to adequately describe the various
projects. This is a cursory survey of just a few of them along with some
of Piano's comments and descriptions. But mention must be made of some
other major works still in progress: a new Mercedes Benz Design Center,
in Stuttgart, Germany; a new Auditorium for Rome which consists of three
separate concert halls with capacities of 2700, 1200 and 500 seats; a mixed
use tower for offices and residences in Sydney, Australia; and a new master
plan for the renovation and expansion of Harvard University Art Museums
in Cambridge, Massachusetts. And there are many others.
President and
Mrs. Clinton Will Host the
20th Anniversary Pritzker Architecture Prize Ceremony at The White House
President and Mrs. Clinton will honor the Pritzker
Architecture Prize by hosting its 20th anniversary ceremony at the White
House on Wednesday, June 17. The occasion will be the annual presentation
of the $100,000 prize, which this year goes to Italian architect, Renzo
Piano. The international prize, which goes each year to a living architect
somewhere in the world, was established by the Pritzker family of Chicago
through their Hyatt Foundation in 1979. It has been awarded to seven Americans,
and (including this year) fourteen architects from ten other countries.
Jay A. Pritzker, President of The Hyatt Foundation, said, "To be invited
to present the prize at The White House is indeed an honor for us. This
adds great prestige to the recognition of what the prize stands for around
the world. Over the two decades of prize-giving, a tradition of moving
the ceremony to world sites of architectural significance has evolved becoming,
in effect, an international grand tour of historic buildings. We have used
buildings by Laureates of the Pritzker Prize, such as the National Gallery
of Art's East Building designed by I.M. Pei, or Frank Gehry's Guggenheim
Museum in Bilbao, Spain, or Richard Meier's new Getty Center in Los Angeles.
In some instances, we have gone to places of historic interest such as
France's Palace of Versailles and Grand Trianon, or Todai-ji Buddhist Temple
in Japan, or Prague Castle in The Czech Republic. Our most beautiful museums
have hosted the event, from our home town of Chicago's Art Institute to
New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art and Fort Worth's Kimball Art Museum.
In a way, the Pritzker Prize roots are in Washington because the first
two ceremonies were held at Dumbarton Oaks."
One of the founding jurors of the Pritzker Prize, the late Lord Clark of
Saltwood, who was an art historian, perhaps best known for his television
series and book, Civilisation, said at one of the ceremonies, "A great
historical episode can exist in our imagination almost entirely in the
form of architecture. Very few of us have read the texts of early Egyptian
literature. Yet we feel we know those infinitely remote people almost as
well as our immediate ancestors, chiefly because of their sculpture and
architecture."
Often referred to as the "Nobel Prize for architecture," and "the profession's
highest honor," in media coverage around the world, J. Carter Brown, who
has served as Chairman of the Pritzker Jury since the prize was founded
in 1979, pointed out that the President's participation in the ceremony
will make the Nobel comparison even more apt, since the King of Sweden
presides over the Nobels. Brown, who is also Chairman Emeritus of the National
Gallery of Art and Chairman of the United States Commission of Fine Arts,
explained further that the ceremony location changes each year to honor
significant buildings of the past while at the same time honoring living
architects of our own time. "The White House is a perfect example of a
work of architecture being a recognized symbol of freedom and democracy,
known throughout the world," Brown said, "while the designer, James Hoban,
is virtually unknown. With the Pritzker Prize calling attention to architects
of excellence and their work, perhaps there will be fewer who end up in
that 'unknown' category."
The virtually unknown White House architect, James Hoban, was an Irishman
who had immigrated to this country after the Revolution, and established
himself as an architect. He won the competition to design the President's
house in 1792, being awarded a gold medal worth $400 and a parcel of land
for his own use. His estimate of the cost of construction was $400,000,
which proved to be low, and caused many future wranglings with Congress
for additional funds. The first Chief Executive to occupy the mansion was
President John Adams moving into an unfinished structure in May of 1800,
when all of the 130 federal employees moved to Washington.
When the British burned the White House in 1814, it was fortunate that
the architect Hoban was still available for the restoration. Three years
later, James Monroe moved into the reconstruction. Ten years later, the
South Portico was added, and then five more years passed before the North
Portico was built. It was not until 1902 when Theodore Roosevelt restored
and enlarged the White House that the West Wing was added. The Oval Office
was built in 1909, and the East Wing was added in 1942 during the Franklin
Delano Roosevelt administration.
In 1948, Harry S. Truman was alarmed by his daughter's sitting room floor
collapsing to the floor below, and when engineers and architects began
a thorough inspection, they discovered that the building was in danger
of total collapse. To preserve tradition and sentiment, Congress adopted
a plan to remove the interior, retaining the exterior walls. Everything
in the building, chandeliers, mouldings, fireplaces, etc., was removed
and carefully stored away while the structure was reinforced with steel
and rebuilt adding air conditioning and fire proofing throughout. Then
all the items were built back into the restoration. Four years and five
million dollars later, the Trumans were able to move back in from their
temporary residence across Pennsylvania Avenue, Blair House.
It remained for Jacqueline Kennedy to spearhead efforts to replace mediocre
furniture reproductions with appropriate period antiques of historic significance
and artistic merit. For her, it was a matter of scholarship. She felt that
everything in the White House should have a reason for being there. Because
public funds were not allocated for such an effort, private donations were
relied upon, and many fine pieces were presented. She also found a great
many valuable items in storage sheds and basements, including a carved
desk that had been presented to President Hayes by Queen Victoria. It had
been made from oak timbers of the ship Resolute. The First Lady had the
desk installed in President Kennedy's office.
The words carved on the mantel of the fireplace in the State Dining Room
are, "I pray Heaven to bestow the best of Blessings on this House and all
that shall hereafter inhabit it. May none but honest and wise Men ever
rule under this roof." Written by President John Adams to his wife on the
first night he spent in the building, it was Franklin Delano Roosevelt
who had them carved in the mantel.
Biographical
Facts
Birthdate and Place:
September 14, 1937
Genoa, Italy
Education
Milan Polytechnic School of Architecture
1964
Awards and Honors
1978
International Union of Architects Prize
Mexico City
1981
Compasso d'Oro
Milan, Italy
Honorary Fellow
American Institute of Architects
1984
Commandeur des Arts et des Lettres
France
1985
Legion d'Honneur
France
Honorary Fellow
Royal Institute of British Architects
1989
Royal Gold Medal for Architecture
Royal Institute of British Architects
Cavaliere di Gran Croce
Rome,Italy
1990
Honorary Doctorate
Stuttgart University, Germany
Kyoto Prize, Inamori Foundation
Kyoto, Japan
1991
Neutra Prize
Pomona, California
Honorary Doctorate
University of Delft, The Netherlands
1994
Honorary Fellowship
American Academy of Arts and Letters, U.S.A.
Arnold W. Brunner Memorial Prize, U.S.A.
Goodwill Ambassador for Architecture
UNESCO
Officier dans l'Ordre National du Mérite
Paris, France
Premio Michelangelo
Rome, Italy
Prize for Actuactiones temporales de
Urbanismo y Arquitectura
Ayuntamiento de Madrid, Spain
1995
Art Prize, Akademie der Kunste
Berlin, Germany
Praemium Imperiale
Tokyo, Japan
Erasmus Prize
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
1996
Premio Capo Circeo
Rome, Italy
Telecom Prize
Napoli, Italy
1997
Diploma European Award for Steel Structures
For the Elevated Heliport Structure
Lingotto, Torino, Italy
Chronological List of Selected
Projects
by Renzo Piano
(listed by completion year)
1964
Lightweight Structures
1973
Office building for B&B
Como, Italy
1974
One-family homes
Cusago, Milan, Italy
1977
Georges Pompidou cultural centre
Paris, France
IRCAM, Institute for acoustic reseach
Paris, France
1979
Participation project for the
rehabilitation of historical centers
Otranto, Italy
1980
VSS Experimental vehicle for FIAT
Turin, Italy
1982
Housing in Rigo district
Perugia, Italy
IBM Travelling Exhibition in Europe
Calder retrospective exhibition
Turin, Italy
1984
Schlumberger factories rehabilitation
Paris, France
Musical space for Prometeo opera by L. Nono
Venice, Italy
Office building for Olivetti
Naples, Italy
1985
Office building for Lowara factory
Vicenza, Italy
1987
Museum for the Menil Collection
Houston, Texas
1988
Headquarter for Light Metals Experimental Institute
Novara, Italy
1989
San Nicola Football stadium
Bari, Italy
1990
Underground stations for Ansaldo
Genoa, Italy
Bercy commercial center
Paris, France
IRCAM Extension
Paris, France
1991
Cruise ships for P&O
U.S.A.
Housing for the City of Paris
Paris, France
Thomson factories
Guyancourt, France
1992
Headquarter for the Credito Industriale Sardo
Cagliari, Italy
Columbus International Exposition
Aquarium and Congress Hall
Genoa, Italy
1994
Lingotto Congress-Concert Hall
Turin, Italy
Kansai International Airport
Osaka, Japan
1995
Cy Twombly Pavilion
Houston, Texas
Meridien Hotel at Lingotto and Business Center
Torino, Italy
Headquarter Harbour Authorities
Genoa, Italy
Enviroment, Congress Center and Offices
Cité Internationale
Lyon, France
1996
Contemporary Art Museum
Cité Internationale
Lyon, France
I Portici (Shopping Street at Lingotto)
Turin, Italy
1997
Reconstruction of the Atelier Brancusi
Paris, France
Museum of Science and Technology
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Museum of the Beyeler Foundation
Riehen, Basel, Switzerland
Ushibuka Bridge
Kumamoto, Japan
Debis Tower, Potsdamer Platz
Berlin, Germany
1998
Cultural Center Jean Marie Tjibaou
Nouméa, New Caledonia
Mercedes Benz Design Center
Stuttgart, Germany
Wind tunnel for Ferrari, Maranello
Modena, Italy
Projects in Progress
1985
Newquarter Cité Internationale:
Multiplex Cinema, Hotel and Casinò
Lyon, France
1987
Rehabilitation of the Fiat Lingotto factories
Torino, Italy
1988
Commercial and Offices Center
Lecco, Italy
Lodi Bank Headquarters, Lodi
Milano, Italy
1991
New Church for Padre Pio
Foggia, Italy
1992
Potsdamer Platz area for Daimler Benz
Berlin, Germany
1994
Auditorium Roma
Rome, Italy
Reconstruction of the Unesco headquarters
Place de Fontenoy, Paris, France
1995
Interior and Exterior Rehabilitation
of the Pompidou Center
Paris, France
Commercial settlement, Nola
Napoli Italy
1996
Contemporary Art Museum
Smallands Arena
Varnamö, Sweden
Urban rehabilitation for
the Barilla area
Parma, Italy
High-Rise office block
Sydney, Australia
Fila Headquarters
Baltimore, U.S.A
Fila Headquarters
Seoul, Korea
Completion open spaces, Old Harbour
Genova, Italy
1997
PTT Telecom office tower
Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Pirelli Workshop and factories
Milano, Italy
Auditorium Parma, ex-area Eridania
Parma, Italia
Harvard University Art Museum Master Plan
renovation and Expansion Project
Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.A.
Films and T.V. Activities
1978
G.Macchi
Habitat by RAI
(Italian)
1985
G.Macchi
The Georges Pompidou Centre in Paris
by RAI
(Italian)
M.Arduino
Piano di recupero
del quartiere del Molo
(Italian)
M.Arduino,
Genova Città di Colombo
(Italian)
M.Arduino
IBM L’architettura della mostra
(Italian and English)
M.Arduino
La macchina espositiva
(Italian)
M.Arduino
L’utensile multiplo
(Italian)
1986
M.Arduino
Cantiere Aperto
(Italian)
CCI Centre Pompidou
Renzo Piano
(Italian)
M.Arduino
Conversione degli stabilimenti Schlumberger
(Italian)
1989
Renzo Piano
BBC
(English)
1991
Effetto Piano
RAI 2
(Italian)
1992
L’Appuntamento TMC
by Alain Elkann
(Italian)
The Late Show BBC
Renzo Piano
by Waldermar Januszczak
(English)
Genova, anno zero
RTSI-Swiss television
(Italian)
1994
21st Century Airport
Kansai International Airport
Osaka, Japan
Channel Four, England
by the Skyscraper production
(English)
1996
Südwestfunk Renzo Piano
for Südwest 3, BI Berlin, Bayern 3 ARD
(German)
1997
R.Piano, Out of the Blue, CD Rom,
ACTA-RAI-RPBW-UTET (Italian-German-English-French)
An Enhanced Interview, Renzo Piano
on newMetropolis, Amsterdam CD Rom,
Ann Maes Design & Nuova Communications
(English)
Exhibitions
1967
Triennale
Milano, Italy
1969
Architectural Association
London, England
1970
Musée des Arts Decoratifs
Paris, France
1982
RIBA, London
Paris Biennale
IN-ARCH
Rome, Italy
Palazzo Bianco
Genova, Italy
1983
Sottochiesa di San Francesco
Arezzo, Italy
Museo di Capodimonte
Napoli, Italy
Architectural Museum
Helsinki, Finland
1984
MASP
Sao Paulo, Brasil
Columbia University
New York, New York
Rice University,
Houston, Texas
University of Southern California
Los Angeles, California
Pennsylvania University
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
1985
Cultural Institute
Tokyo, Japan
Internationale Bauhausstellung
Berlin, Germany
M.I.T.
Boston, Massachusetts
1986
University of New South Wales
Sydney, Australia
Palladio’s Basilica
Vicenza, Italy
Vancouver Museum
Vancouver, Canada
1987
9H Gallery,
London, England
Menil Museum
Houston, Texas
Sorbonne Chapel
Paris, France
1988
Vieille Charité
Marseille, France
Expo’ 2000
Moscow, Russia
1989
Royal Institute of British Architects
London, England
1990
Toko Museum
Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya, Sapporo, Japan
1992
Architectural League
New York, New York
1993
Menil Collection
Houston, Texas
Aedes Gallery
Berlin, Germany
MOPT Gallery
Madrid, Spain
1994
Carnegie Museum of Art
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Art Institute of Chicago
Chicago, Illinois
GA Gallery
Tokyo, Japan
1995
Netherlands Architecture Institute
NAI, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
1996
Light Construction
Museum of Modern Art
New York, New York
Potsdamer Platz exhibition
Genova, Italy
Italian Design
Triennale, Milano, Italy
VI International Exhibition
of Architecture Biennale
Venezia, Italy
1997
Out of the blue
Kunst-und Ausstellungshalle
Bonn, Germany
Out of the blue
Villa Pignatelli
Napoli, Italy
Renzo Piano Workshop
Beyeler Fondation
Riehen, Basel, Switzerland
Roma Auditorium
La Serra, Rome, Italy
1998
Out of the blue
MA Gallery
Tokyo, Japan
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